THE UNITED STATES AND IT’S SPHERE OF INFLUENCE

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Transcript THE UNITED STATES AND IT’S SPHERE OF INFLUENCE

THE UNITED STATES AND IT’S
SPHERE OF INFLUENCE
MAD – Mutually Assured Destruction
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After WWII, the US had a monopoly on nuclear weaponry and was unchallenged until
Soviet testing in 1949. The US had initially used this monopoly as a deterrent to Soviet
aggression; military analysts estimated conventional Soviet forces to outnumber the
US 2:1, an obvious disadvantage. For two decades the superpowers wage an arms
race, with each side trying to gain an edge by developing new and increasingly more
powerful weapons. Until the late 1960’s early 70’s, the USA had nuclear superiority.
During this time, agreement was reached on testing and non-proliferation of weapons,
but it was not until the 1970’s that any agreement on limitation of the number of
armaments was reached.
Once both powers mastered the production of thermonuclear power, they became
preoccupied with developing delivery systems to convey their nuclear weapons to
their targets. (The Soviets tested their first ICBM or inter-continental ballistic missile in
August 1957) Both sides relied on military resources including; personnel, documents,
and materials, captured at labs, factories and missile sites in Germany at the end of
WWII. The arms race developed out of a desire to possess enough new and
technologically superior weaponry to prevent the opposition from striking first. This
strategy was based on the concept of MAD
Mutually Assured Destruction: The promise that if one power destroys the population
of the enemy, the act will be reciprocated with force equal to or greater than their
own.
The Race for Space
• On 4 October 1957, the Soviets launched Sputnik I, the first Earth
satellite to achieve space orbit successfully. The following month, they
launched a satellite containing a test animal. Khrushchev was
determined to bluff regarding the true size and quality of the aircraft
and missile force of the USSR. Using the supposed superiority of
Soviet technology, he attempted in 1958 to wrest control from of West
Berlin from the West.
• Unfortunately for Khrushchev the US had, developed the U-2 spy plane
(able to fly with out detection by radar.)
• Such a plane piloted by Gary Powers was shot down in Siberia in May
1960. It was now obvious to the world that Khrushchev was bluffing
and the US had been able to ascertain Soviet strategic inferiority,
through the use of espionage.
• The US conducted its first satellite launched in February 1958, but the
USSR continued to be in the forefront of space technology.
The Race for Space
• In 1960 the Soviets sent two dogs into space and successfully retrieved
them from orbit.
• On 12, April 1961, the Soviet Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, became the first
human being to travel in space (as you can imagine the Americans were
thrilled) On April, 14th he returned and was paraded through Moscow with
Khrushchev.
• Despite a temporary domination of the US in the Space Race the Soviets
were unable to achieve military superiority
• The American U-2 flights revealed that significantly fewer missiles were
actually in place than the Soviets had led the West to believe and that the
Americans had an edge in long-range strategic weapons.
• The development of the Polaris missile with a final range of 2500 nautical
miles, gave the US a distinct strategic superiority as they could now bomb
anyone anywhere on Earth (I am sure that made them feel better about
the first man in space thing)
 Suptnik I
Yuri Gagarin ->
The Struggle for Global Domination
Continues: East meets West
• Despite a temporary domination of the US in the Space Race the Soviets
were unable to achieve military superiority
• The American U-2 flights revealed that significantly fewer missiles were
actually in place than the Soviets had led the West to believe and that the
Americans had an edge in long-range strategic weapons.
• The American development of the Polaris missile with a final range of 2500
nautical miles, gave the US a distinct strategic superiority as they could now
bomb anyone anywhere on Earth (I am sure that made them feel better
about the first man in space thing)
• By 1964, The US had 1880 strategic delivery units Vs. the 472 held by the
Soviets.
• The Cuban Missile Crisis across in part because the Soviets wanted to
overcome inferiority in missile deployment by strategic missile placement.
Partial Test Ban Treaty and beyond
• After the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) The US and the USSR agreed on the
Partial Test Ban Treaty (this limited nuclear testing in the atmosphere,
under water and in outer space)
• However, despite the fact that both sides knew that a nuclear confrontation
would destroy the world, both sides continued to stockpile nuclear
weapons throughout the 1960’s, following a policy of brinkmanship (the
practice, especially in international relations, of taking a dispute to the
verge of conflict in the hope of forcing the opposition to make concessions)
• By 1969, the USSR had tripled its stock of ICBMs and added a significant
number of Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) to its arsenal
• This gave the USSR military parity with the US in weapons development
• In the Early 1970’s the US began a program to develop new types of nuclear
technology. A new anti-ballistic missile program was created and the
Multiple Independently Targeted Re-entry Vehicle or MIRV (which gave the
ICBM 3 to 10 individually targeted nuclear payloads) was developed
JFK Announcing Nuclear Weapons Partial
Test Ban Treaty 1963
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
• The Arms race was both scary and expensive.
• In the late 1960’s the US and the USSR began to discuss the
possibility of putting a cap on the number of strategic
weapons available and who would have access to them.
• In 1968 the US the Soviet Union and Great Britain signed the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
• By the time it came into effect in March of 1970, 97 countries
had agreed to limit the right to posses nuclear weapons to
those countries who already possessed them.
• China and France refused to ratify the agreement (side note:
neither of them had nuclear weapons at the time)
SALT I
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The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty did nothing to limit the number of nuclear
weapons being built by the nuclear powers of the world.
This changed on May 26, 1972, with the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks agreement or
SALT I. This agreement limited the US and USSR to two Anti-Ballistic missile (ABM) sites
and 200 interceptors each.
The ABM was designed to intercept and destroy incoming missiles before they reached
their targets
Parity in the number of ABM`s would hopefully preserve a strategic balance and limit
the potential of either side risking a first strike
Limits were also placed on offensive weapons. The US capped ICBM production at
1054, while the USSR was permitted to grow its arsenal from 1530 to 1618, and so on,
agreements were reached on the number of submarines, launchers, and land based
missiles
The Soviets retained superior numbers of weaponry, however the US had superiority in
those weapons not covered by the treaty, like long range bombers and MIRVs.
SALT I was diplomatically important, however as many weapons were not regulated by
the agreement it failed to stop the arms race.
The Soviets continued to work on an MIRV of their own, and the US was working on the
Trident submarine, the MX and cruise missiles
SALT II and beyond
• The SALT I agreement expired after five years. Soon after signing in, the
Soviets and Americans began to talk about SALT I which would be
designed to control weapons technology.
• By 1974 Presidents Ford and Brezhnev agreed in principle to limit
strategic missiles.
• Under the terms of the agreement each side would be permitted 2400
strategic missiles 1320 of which could be equipped with MIRVs, it also
limited strategic bombers and placed limits on the numbers of weapons
both sides could build
• Not everyone was happy with SALT II it was criticized in the US Senate
and combined with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (in 1979) stopped
it from being ratified. Despite failure to ratify the agreement both sides
maintained its spirit until 1985 and the radical changes to the USSR
brought about by the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev.
SALT II and beyond
• The agreements of the 1970`s failed to erase military tensions
between East and West. When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan,
NATO asked the US to send 572 cruise and Pershing II missiles into
western Europe to counter any threat from Soviet SS-20 missiles
• Between 1980 and `85 The US defence budget rose 51% to $269
billion. 25% of this went to strategic weapons systems: B-1 bomber,
MX missile and Trident submarine. The remainder was spent on
conventional forces (including those in the developing world, more
on this later)
• President Ronald Reagan claimed that the Soviets had achieved
military superiority and put all arms-control negotiations on hold
for the first year and a half of his presidency and began to
concentrate on a nuclear defensive strategy.
The Star Wars Project: Ronald Reagan`s dream for a better USA
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The Strategic Defence Initiative (SDI) or Star Wars project was perhaps the most
dramatic of Reagan's ideas
It initially entailed a defensive shield (like a big space umbrella) which would hit and
destroy incoming enemy missiles, this would mean that no one could hit the US with
nukes and the US would once again have the nuclear superiority it had enjoyed in the
1940`s
SDI was the latest in a long line of strategies to protect the US from nuclear attack.
Before I CBMs, there were defences against a manned bomber attack over the North
Pole. Bomb shelters were built all over North America, plans were laid to evacuate cities
inside of the 4-6 hours it took to send the bomb to the USA.
Then when ICBMs were developed and the warning time dropped to under 15 minutes
strategies were developed to ensure that a retaliatory strike would be launched before
the Soviet bombs could wipe out life in the US
Then anti-missile defence systems were designed to counter the ICBMs and shoot them
down before they could reach their targets.
The American system was called Spartan-Sprint and consisted of two missiles, the first
designed to explode a nuclear device in space in order to melt incoming missiles, A
second faster missile was designed to engage missiles that the initial firing missed.
Unfortunately neither the American or Soviet anti-missile defence systems worked
The Star Wars Project: Ronald Reagan`s dream for a better USA:
Continued
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Proposed by Ronald Reagan in1983 SDI gained popularity in the nuclear debate in 1985
The concept was presented by the government as based in sound and achievable
scientific theory, however, it was really vague, unrealistic, impractical and prohibitively
expensive
Reagan proposed that a total defensive shield or astrodome be built that would protect
all of the US from attack by Soviet missiles
Then the concept of a selective shield was proposed (largely because of cost) this shield
would protect American missiles needed for a counter-strike in the event of an enemy
attack.
The third proposal was a offensive laser system based in outer space, designed to attack
Soviet cities directly and burn them to the ground (did I mention it did this from space?)
Of course the big space laser/Super Space dome were in total violation of the ABM treaty
(part of SALT I)
It also seriously upset the Soviets, who were already going through the beginning of a
major period of adjustment
Star Wars and the SDI are not total fantasies, the American Defence Department
announced in 1987 it would track and target enemy missile sites from space shuttles the
Ages class cruiser has a computer controlled firing system
Star Wars "Peace Shield" SDI
commercial 1987
The Soviet Response
• In 1977 the USSR led the US 3 to 2 in mega tonnage ( the explosive
yield of bombs measured in tonnes of TNT) however, it lacked missile
accuracy.
• Between 1971 and `84 defence spending in the USSR grew by 5% per
year.
• Estimates suggest that this was the equivalent of between 13 and 17%
of their GNP (compared to 5.5% of the US GNP)
• In the late 1970`s Soviet accuracy improved an d technology they
imported from Japan allowed Soviet Submarines to move more quietly
• In the 1980`s the quality of Soviet aircraft, submarines, warships and
missiles all improved significantly
• However by 1985 the money committed to the defence sector of the
economy had created serious problems in the domestic economy and
unrest and discontent among the Soviet citizens
Soviet Response
• Between 1979 and 1985 the arms race escalated, as the US and
USSR argued about the Soviets in Afghanistan and NATO`s nuclear
policy, among other issues
• In 1981 Reagan proposed the Zero option according to which the
Americans would not deploy missiles in Europe if the USSR would
dismantle their SS-20`s there. The USSR refused fearing the
remaining bombs of the French and British
• In November of `81 Reagan puts forth the Strategic Arms
Reduction Talks (START)
• This involved the destruction of missiles on both sides, however
left the US in a position of superiority regarding cruise missiles and
bombers
• The Soviets were not interested
American Society 1950-1980`s:
The Civil Rights Movement
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The American Civil Rights Movement refers to the reform movements in the United States
aimed at outlawing racial discrimination against African Americans and restoring Suffrage in
Southern states.
Brown v. Board of Education, 1954 declares that the education of black children in separate
public schools from their white counterparts was unconstitutional.
Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955–1956 Rosa Parks refused to give up her
seat on a public bus to make room for a white passenger. (African Americans were by law
expected to sit at the back of the bus and make way for whites) Parks was arrested, tried,
and convicted for disorderly conduct and violating a local ordinance. After word of this
incident reached the black community, African-American leaders gathered and organized the
Montgomery Bus Boycott ultimately this pushed for full desegregation of public buses. With
the support of most of Montgomery's 50,000 African Americans, the boycott until the local
ordinance segregating African-Americans and whites on public buses was lifted. the
boycotts, reduced bus revenue by approximately 80%. A federal court ordered
Montgomery's buses desegregated in November 1956, and the boycott ended in triumph.
Desegregating Little Rock Arkansas, 1957
Governor of Arkansas called out the National Guard on September 4 to prevent entry to the
nine African-American students who had sued for the right to attend an integrated school, in
Little Rock Central High School.
• Montgomery Bus Boycott
The Civil Rights Movement Continued
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Sit-ins, 1960 not the first but one of the early sit-ins began at a Woolworth's store in
Greensboro, North Carolina four students from an all-black college, sat down at the
segregated lunch counter to protest Woolworth's policy of excluding African Americans.
Sit-ins spread the protesters were encouraged to dress professionally, to sit quietly, and
to occupy every other stool so that potential white sympathizers could join in
. As students across the south began to "sit-in" local authority figures sometimes used
brute force against the protestors
Freedom Rides, 1961 Freedom Rides were journeys by Civil Rights activists on interstate
buses into the segregated southern United States to test the United States Supreme
Court decision that ended segregation for passengers engaged in inter-state travel. This
was dangerous and the riders often faced violent repression for example In
Montgomery, Alabama a mob charged a bus load of riders, smashing a Life
photographer in the face with his own camera. In Alabama, a bus was firebombed,
forcing its passengers to flee for their lives.
Voter Registration Organizing literacy test were being used in the US to keep African
Americans off the voting roles by creating standards that even highly educated people
could not meet. In addition, employers fired blacks who tried to register to vote and
landlords evicted them from their homes. voter registration campaigns became an
integral part of the Civil Rights Movement., and helped to led to the passage of the
Voting Rights Act
Freedom
Rides
The Civil Rights Movement Continued: Voter Registration
Organizing
• In the US white Americans especially in the South had political
control of the country . The voting rights of blacks were
oppressed, racial segregation imposed, and violence against
African Americans was wide spread. The early 1900s was a period
of massive racial prejudice and oppression in the USA. while
problems and civil rights violations were most intense in the
South, social tensions affected African Americans in other regions
as well.
The Civil Rights Movement Continued: Voter
Registration Organizing
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The system of overt, state-sanctioned racial discrimination and oppression that
emerged out of the post-Reconstruction South became known as the "Jim Crow"
system. It remained virtually intact into the early 1950s. Systematic
disenfranchisement (the removal of the African American’s ability to vote) of
African Americans lasted until national civil rights legislation was passed in the mid1960s. For more than 60 years, for example, they were not able to elect a single
person in the South to represent their interests in Congress, and because African
Americans could not vote, they could not sit on juries limited to voters. They had
no part in the justice system or law enforcement.
There were many tactics used by the white majority to keep African Americans
from being able to vote these included literacy tests that used standards that even
highly educated people could not meet. In addition, employers fired blacks who
tried to register to vote and landlords evicted them from their homes voter
registration campaigns became an integral part of the Civil Rights Movement., and
helped to led to the passage of the Voting Rights Act
Organizations associated with the Civil
Rights movement
• NAACP National Association for the
Advancement of Coloured People (founded
1909)
• SNCC Student Non-violent Coordinating
Committee
• CORE Congress on Racial Equality
• All of these groups were active in various parts
of the following civil rights activities
Civil Rights Continued: Desegregation
• Integration of Mississippi Universities, 1956-1965 resulted in massive
protests, initially the universities blocked African Americans from entering
the universities. After integration was forced through the court system white
students and other whites began rioting , throwing rocks at the U.S. Marshals
guarding the African American student who wished to enter the State
university, then firing on the marshals. Two people, including a French
journalist, were killed; many marshals suffered gunshot wounds; and many
others were injured. After the Mississippi Highway Patrol withdrew from the
campus, President Kennedy sent in the regular Army to enforce
desegregation.
• Albany Movement, 1961-1962 a desegregation movement formed in Albany,
Georgia by local activists, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC), and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) ,later Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC) also became involved.
• The Albany Movement mobilized thousands of citizens and attracted
nationwide attention but failed to accomplish its goals due to opposition.
• The Albany Movement 1961-62 (4:42)
Civil Rights Continued: Desegregation
• Birmingham campaign, 1963-1964 the Birmingham campaign focused on
one goal—the desegregation of Birmingham's downtown merchants, rather
than total desegregation, as in Albany. The movement's efforts were helped
(in a way) by the brutal response of local authorities
• The campaign used a variety of nonviolent methods of confrontation,
including sit-ins, kneel-ins at local churches, and a march to the county
building to mark the beginning of a drive to register voters.
• The city obtained an injunction banning the protests. Believing that the
order was unconstitutional, the protestors defied it and prepared for the
mass arrests of their supporters. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of those
arrested, this is where King is supposed to have written his famous “Letter
from Birmingham Jail” in which King stated that: not only was civil
disobedience justified in the face of unjust laws, but that "one has a moral
responsibility to disobey unjust laws.“ He also said one should be willing to
face the consequences of breaking the law.
Desegregation the Birmingham campaign and the Children’s
Crusade
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The Children’s Crusade The desegregation movement in Birmingham was faltering. So a
proposal was made to train high school students to take part in the demonstrations.
As a result, more than one thousand students skipped school to meet at the 16th Street Baptist
Church to join the demonstrations, in what would come to be called the Children's Crusade.
Hundreds of them ended up in jail. This was newsworthy, but in this first encounter, the police
acted with restraint
The crusade however continued. On the next day, another group of students gathered at the
church. When they started marching, officials unleashed police dogs on them, then turned the
city's fire hoses on the children.
Television cameras broadcast to the nation the scenes of water from fire hoses knocking down
schoolchildren and dogs attacking individual demonstrators.
Sympathy for the movement grew in some areas, however other events of 1963 included,
George Wallace, the Governor of Alabama, trying to block the integration of the University of
Alabama. President John F. Kennedy was forced to send in the national guard to insure the
enrolment of two black students.
Shortly after this Medgar Evers was murdered in Mississippi, for talking to a white girl.
Despite these discouraging events the movement was gaining government recognition the
week after Evers’s murder, on June 19, 1963, JFK submitted his Civil Rights bill to Congress.
The KKK bombed a church in Birmingham, killing four young girls in September
Civil Rights Continued: March on Washington, 1963
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The march had six official goals:
meaningful civil rights laws
a massive federal works program
full and fair employment
decent housing
the right to vote
adequate integrated education
Of these, the march's real focus was on passage of the civil rights law that
the Kennedy Administration had proposed after the upheavals in
Birmingham.
• The march was a success, an estimated 200,000 to 300,000 demonstrators
gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial, to listen to King deliver his
famous "I Have a Dream" speech.
St. Augustine, Florida, 1963-1964
• Events in St. Augustine, Florida also contributed to the passage of the
landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. A movement, led by a local African
American dentist and Air Force veteran, had been picketing segregated local
institutions since 1963, he and three companions were brutally beaten at a
Ku Klux Klan rally in the fall of that year.
• Nightriders shot into black homes
• Four teenagers who came to be known as "The St. Augustine Four" spent six
months in jail and reform school for a sit-in in at the local Woolworth's lunch
counter. It took a special action of the governor and cabinet of Florida to
release them after national protests.
• In 1964, activists urged northern college students to come to the St.
Augustine for Spring Break and go not to the beach, but to take part in
demonstrations.
• Four prominent Massachusetts women all of whose husbands were
Episcopal bishops, and the wife of the vice president of a major insurance
company also came to lend their support,
St. Augustine, Florida, 1963-1964
• The arrest of Mrs. Peabody, the 72 year old mother of the governor of
Massachusetts, for attempting to eat at the segregated Ponce de Leon
Motor Lodge in an integrated group, made front page news across the
country
• Dr. Martin Luther King was arrested in St. Augustine in 1964, the only
place in Florida he was arrested. He sent a "Letter from the St. Augustine
Jail" to a northern supporter, Rabbi Israel Dresner of New Jersey, urging
him to recruit others to participate in the movement. This resulted, a
week later, in the largest mass arrest of rabbis in American history--while
conducting a pray-in at the Monson Motel.
• Perhaps the most famous photograph taken in St. Augustine during this
period shows the manager of the Monson Motel pouring acid in the
swimming pool while blacks and whites are swimming in it. That
photograph was run on the front page of the Washington newspaper the
day the senate went to vote on passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The Civil Rights Movement
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Mississippi Freedom Summer, 1964 In the summer of 1964, nearly 1,000 activists went
to Mississippi most of them were white college students who went to join with local
black activists to register voters, teach in "Freedom Schools," and organize the
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party
Many white residents deeply resented the protestors
State and local governments, police, the White Citizens' Council and the Ku Klux Klan
used arrests, beatings, arson, murder, spying, firing, evictions, and other forms of
intimidation and harassment to oppose the project and prevent blacks from registering
to vote
In June three civil rights workers disappeared. A young black Mississippian and two
Jewish activists, they were found weeks later, murdered by conspirators who turned out
to be local members of the Klan, some of them members of the Neshoba County
sheriff's department. (The movie Mississippi Burning was based on these events).
Dr. King Awarded Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize. Dr Martin Luther King Jr Accepts the Nobel Peace Prize
Boycott of New Orleans by American Football League players, 1965
Civil Rights in the USA: Selma Alabama
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Selma and the Voting Rights Act, 1965 a voter registration program had been
under way in Selma, Alabama, since 1963, but by 1965 had made little headway in
the face of opposition
King came to Selma to lead several marches, at which he was arrested along with
other demonstrators. The marchers continued to meet violent resistance from
police. When a resident of nearby Marion, was killed by police at a march in
February. The director of the Selma Movement, initiated a plan to march from
Selma to Montgomery.
In March of 1965, a march of 600 people to walked the 54 miles (87 km) from
Selma to the state capital in Montgomery.
Only six blocks into the march, however, state troopers and local law enforcement,
some mounted on horseback, attacked the peaceful demonstrators with Billy clubs,
tear gas, rubber tubes wrapped in barbed wire and bull whips. Driving the marchers
back into Selma..
national broadcasts of footage of lawmen attacking unresisting marchers seeking
the right to vote provoked a national response. The marchers were able to obtain a
court order permitting them to make the march without incident two weeks later.
John Coltrane (Not relatively significant in the civil rights movement, but
made a good song based on the Alabama events called “Alabama”)
John Coltrane singing Alabama (5:54)
Selma and the Voting Rights Act, 1965, Continued
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After a second march in March, however, local whites murdered another voting rights
supporter,
Also in March, four Klansmen shot and killed a Detroit homemaker as she drove marchers
back to Selma at night after the successfully completed march to Montgomery.
Eight days after the first march, Johnson delivered a televised address to support of the
voting rights bill he had sent to Congress. In it he stated:
“But even if we pass this bill, the battle will not be over. What happened in Selma is part of a
far larger movement which reaches into every section and state of America. It is the effort of
American Negroes to secure for themselves the full blessings of American life. Their cause
must be our cause too. Because it is not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must
overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.”
President Lyndon Johnson passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965, this act suspended poll
taxes, literacy tests and other subjective voter tests. It authorized Federal supervision of
voter registration in states and individual voting districts where such tests were being
Memphis, King assassination 1968 King was assassinated on April 4, 1968. Riots broke out in
more than a hundred cities across the US
CBS News special report on King’s Murder
The other side of the Civil Rights movement:
Black power
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King faced challenges from within the Civil Rights
Movement to the two key tenets upon which the
movement had been based: integration and
non-violence.
Black Power was made most public by the Black Panther
Party which was founded in 1966.
This group followed ideology stated by Malcolm X and
the Nation of Islam using a "by-any-means necessary"
approach to stopping inequality.
They sought to rid African American neighbourhoods of Police Brutality
Their dress code consisted of leather jackets, berets, light blue shirts, and an afro
hairstyle.
They set up free breakfast programs, but were also known for referring to police
officers as "pigs", and displaying shotguns and a black power fist
The statement "Power to the people.“ Was a popular Black Panther slogan
 Malcolm X, after receiving death
threats.
Tommie Smith and John Carlos performing
the Black Power salute, later ejected from
the Games. 
American Society: Vietnam the early years
• The US had re-established its relationship with China at a time when they
were mired in the Vietnam war.
• Intervention in Vietnam began in the 50’s with military assistance to the
French. By ’54, America was paying for 80% of the French war effort in IndoChina.
• In 1957, Eisenhower revealed the domino theory (the idea that if Vietnam fell
to Communism the rest of South East Asia would also fall like “dominos”) this
therefore meant that Vietnam was of great strategic significance to the
Americans and apparently quite important to stop the spread of communism.
• Eisenhower also believed that Vietnam lay on the West’s defensive perimeter
and therefore within the American sphere of influence
• Thus begins one of the most controversial wars in USA’s history. While the
Vietnam war still goes without validation, it had dramatic effects on American
society.
Domino Theory
American Society: Vietnam continued Lyndon Johnson’s two front war
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Between 1959 and 1975 approximately 55, 000 Americans were killed and another
303,000 wounded in Vietnam
The US also spent about $150 Billion on a war that ended in the Communists taking
Vietnam
The Americans began to escalate their action in Vietnam in 1965, when they began
what would become a massive bombing campaign
Between 1965 and 1968 there were more than 500 000 American military personnel
stationed in Vietnam. By the end of ’67, more bombs had been dropped on
Vietnam than on Europe during WWII.
Commitment to military action in Vietnam came when President Lyndon Johnson
was implementing his “war on poverty,” in an effort to create the Great Society
The two main goals of the Great Society were :social reforms; the elimination of
poverty and the elimination of racial injustice.
Lyndon Johnson launched major spending programs that addressed education,
medical care, urban problems, and transportation
This meant that Johnson wanted the American eeconomy to fund two wars and he
wanted to accomplish this without raising taxes.
President
Lyndon
Johnson
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American Society: Vietnam and social change in the US
• Vietnam occurred at a time when American society was undergoing
fundamental change.
• The civil rights movement, women’s movement, the environmental
movement, and anti-establishment groups that manifested themselves in
communes of “flower children” all challenged societal norms.
• Civil disobedience, draft-dodging, and anti-war demonstrations indicted a
decline of public supported.
• Growing divisiveness was promoted by the mass media. The Tet Offensive
by North Vietnam on American bases, although considered a military
failure on their part, brought about the first time the American public saw
their enemies close-up on television killing their boys.
• The Vietnam war had become increasingly unpopular at home and
internal dissent was on the rise
• The election of Nixon came largely as a result of his promise to extricate
the US out of ‘Nam.
National Guard at the Kent State Vietnam protest, deciding the most
democratic and non-totalitarian way to deal with dissent is to shoot
people who disagree.
Détente Ends
• Issues other than Vietnam preoccupied the US.
• The American government still wanted to take a leading role
in policing the world while at the same time providing highquality consumer goods to its population at reasonable
prices.
• Lack of ability to compete in automotive, steel, and textile
markets pressured American industrialists to become more
innovative.
• The automotive industry was under siege particularly: The
energy crisis of 1973 made fuel economy imperative, and
Japanese cars were far superior in fuel efficiency.
• Trade imbalances and energy prices led to a recession in the
US by the late 1970’s.
End of the Détente continues
• The years of Jimmy Carter (1976-1980) were characterized on the
international scene not only by the end of the détente, but also the
development of the notion that use of nukes need not destroy humanity.
• USA’s national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, saw the world in
bipolar terms and clearly viewed the Soviets as a global threat to be met
militarily.
• The Secretary of State, Cyrus Vance, disagreed
• Faced by two competing positions, Carter adopted a humanitarian
approach and focused on human rights issues in the USSR.
• His support of dissidents infuriated Brezhnev and lessened any
opportunity for meaningful negotiations.
End of the Détente continues
• The most serious rupture in American-Soviet relations at the end of
the 1970s occurred when Brzezinski (the American security advisor)
used détente with China to decrease the influence of the Soviet Union.
• In the new year of 1979, Carter and Deng Xiaoping had exchanged
diplomatic representations and ended 30 years of American nonrecognition of China.
• Brzezinski capitalized on this opportunity and American exports to
China nearly doubled in 1979.
• The Chinese used the relationship to imply American relations while
SALT II agreements were still un-ratified .
• When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, détente effectively ended:
America boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics and refused to ratify
SALT II.
Cola War
• After the rapprochement between the US and China in ‘79, Coca-Cola (having
links to Carter) obtained a monopoly to produce its beverage in China. The
Soviet soft drink market had been given to Pepsi-cola , whose officials were
closely linked to Nixon.
Reagan
• In 1980, Ronald Reagan won a landslide victory over Carter.
• He focused attention on the “evil empire” of USSR– promising to take a
hard-line stand in foreign policy.
• He argues the Soviets continued to produce arms at a time when the
US had directed its attention to domestic issues.
• He figured it was time to redress the imbalance and equip the US to
fight a protracted war with conventional and nuclear weaponry.
• The belief that nuclear war could be won had been popularized
already, and despite contrary evidence, the Reagan administration
operated on such a premise.
Reagan
• Believing that the economy could afford a massive military buildup, the
administration ignored the budgetary deficit it was running.
• The results were devastating: factories became less competitive and
workers faced increased prices and fewer jobs.
• Committed to “taking the government off the backs of the people”,
Reagan refused to raise taxes. The government’s share of the GNP was
25.2%, the highest degree of involvement since WWII.
• The Reagan administration was supported by a militant right wing
anxious to protect the world from Communism.
• Central America was too close to the US for it to allow success. The
Reagan government, thusly, attempted to secure friendly governments
in El Salvador and Nicaragua and prevent infiltration of Cuban or Soviet
communists.
Fearless Defender of Capitalism
American Sphere of Influence
• As early as 1823, with the issue of the Monroe doctrine, the
Americans had declared their hegemony in Central America. The US
had challenged Great Britain in the area by investing in it’s
plantations, railroads, gold and silver, and in utilities and
government securities. By 1914, Central America’s economy was
dependant on its trade with the US.
• Subject to Spanish colonization and economic imperialism of other
nations, Central America has not been able to develop social and
economic systems that satisfy the majority of their citizens.
American Sphere of Influence
• Typically, their economies are controlled by a combination of foreign
investors and local elites. This tends to turn countries into producers of
one or two primary crops for export, rendering most of the locals
impoverished and malnourished.
• Over the years revolutionary groups devoted to ousting the wealthy
elite and breaking the foreign economic monopolies have sprung up.
• As American political influence in Central America has risen with
increasing economic investment, the US has been determined to
maintain economic stability in and control of the region,
• This has been accomplished partially by supporting governments
opposed to revolutionary ideals.
El Salvador
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In the 1970’s, 2% of the population was made up of the Fourteen Families that
controlled all the fertile soil and 60% of the total land area.
The ordinary people of El Salvador ranked among the five most poorly fed
populations in the world, also having one of the highest population growth rates at
3.5% per year. This caused significant strain on the agricultural and environmental
sector
El Salvador had for some time been in the grip of a civil war that can be traced to the
1972 presidential elections that saw Jose Napoleon Duarte deprived of his
democratically achieved victory when the army declared its own candidate the
winner.
After a failed coup, Duarte was exiled to Guatemala and guerrilla groups organized in
the countryside.
Archbishop Oscar Romero became outspoken in condemning government and
government supported vigilante terrorism, and the atrocities the military was
committing on the population
When Pope John Paul II was elected in 1978, the Church advised Latin American
Catholic leaders to commit to community, but not partisan causes. However, Romero
continued his anti-government criticism.
--Archbishop Oscar Romero
Jose Napoleon Duarte --
El Salvador: Continued
• As government repression increased, most church leaders withdrew from
political involvement
• Pope John Paul II voiced disapproval of political activism.
• Romero continued his anti-government protests until he was eventually killed
by a right-wing political group in San Salvador (while celebrating mass).
• The military dictatorship lost whatever support they had when the bodies of
three American nuns and a layperson were found in a shallow grave, the
nuns had been raped and then killed.
• Jimmy Carter suspended military aid to the El Salvador government in
response to these murders
--- Jimmy Carter
Pope John Paul II ---
El Salvador: Continued
• American protest against Salvadoran government atrocities was shortlived.
• The military aid Carter suspended to protest the slaying of US
churchwomen was resumed under Reagan.
• By 1984 US military aid to the government of El Salvador amounted to
$196 million dollars
• Rebel groups were funded through Nicaragua from Cuba.
• The US was committed to the government in power to prevent leftist
revolutions.
• In 1984, Jose Napolean Duarte won the election,
• Though Duarte was officially in charge, the army remained the
dominant force in country.
• This continued a vicious cycle of repression and rebellion of guerrilla
forces in the countryside that left at least 45 000 civilians dead and
created 750 000 Salvadoran refugees.
Nicaragua
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From 1911 to 1933, the US was in military occupation of Nicaragua to control the
natural system of waterways and the site of a contemplated transisthmian canal
much like Panama.
During this period, Nicaragua was essentially a protectorate of the US as they
sought to prevent German and Japanese interests from constructing a canal
through the region to rival its own.
From 1936 to 1979, the Somoza family ruled Nicaragua with American support and
were unhindered in their manipulation of the Nicaraguan economy, controlling
over half the arable land and state air and shipping lines.
In 1972, an earthquake in the capital city of Managua marked the beginning of the
Somoza family’s downfall.
Relief supplies totaling $600 million were stolen by the National Guard and were
resold on the black market.
Anastasio Somoza Debayle profited from the disaster by demanding that Managua
be rebuilt on land he owned, even though the area was liable to future
earthquakes.
Nicaragua: Continued
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The Somoza family fortune reached $1 billion as they profited from reconstruction
contracts and further crowded out the small economic elite outside their ranks. This
small group, now dispossessed of its wealth, formed the first effective opposition to
the Somozas.
This group of moderates led by Joaquin Chamorro in December 1974 formed the
Union Democraticia Liberacion (hereafter UDEL). UDEL was soon obscured by the
Frente Sandinista de Liberacion Nacional (FSLN) , a radical group founded in 1962
and named after guerilla leader Sadino.
The Sandinistas were initially unsuccessful in their attempts to organize a resistance
movement, but in 1977 they staged a series of raids that identified them as a
significant threat to the government.
The assassination of Jaoquin Chamorro on 10 January 1978 provoked rioting and a
general strike. The moderates, though wary of the Sandinistas, joined them in a
coalition to mobilize the masses.
In August 1978, they seized 1500 hostages from a legislative session and demanded
release of political prisoners.
This sparked Sandinista support in the countryside, and sporadic uprisings resulted in
3000 deaths.
Sandinistas
Nicaragua continued
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Despite American attempts to get Somoza and the Sandinistas to negotiate, the
Sandinistas gained control of most of the country the following year.
On 17 July 1979, Somoza fled the country and was assassinated a year later in
Paraguay.
The Sandinistas emerged victorious during the formation of a provisional
government, which included representatives of both left-wing and moderate groups.
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, widow of the assassinated Jaoquin Chamorro, was one
of the country’s most important moderates and a representative of the business
community.
The Sandinistas, represented by Daniel Ortega Saavedra, were now the dominant
faction and encouraged a land-reform program that created both state farms and
state cooperative as well as granting private holdings.
By 1981, members of the provisional government feared the continued dominance of
the Sandinistas
The Sandinistas refused to allow elections fearing resistance.
Former members of Somoza’a National Guard launched guerrilla raids into Nicaragua
from bases in Honduras
--- Violeta Barrios de Chamorro
Daniel Ortega Saavedra ----
Contras
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These guerrilla groups were known as the Contras, they received about $10 million in
covert US aid in 1981 and another $19 million in 1982
The Regan administration wanted to undermine the Sandinista government in 1983 it
gave $24 million to the Contras, whom Reagan now termed “Freedom Fighters”
However by ‘84 fears of a new Vietnam style war caused Congress to stop granting
aid
IN 1985 Congress approved nonmilitary aid
While the CIA had been secretly funding the Contra resistance (Iran-Contra Affair) The
Cubans had been providing military aid to the Sandinistas, to whom the Soviets had
given a $300 million subsidy
In 1984 , the Sandinistas allowed elections and Daniel Ortega won
As commander-in-chief of the Sandinista army, Ortega had been key in the 1979
expulsion of Union organizers who had attempted to ruin the Nicaraguan branches of
US companies like Coca-Cola and Standard Fruit, this suggested that he was willing to
cooperate with US interests
However by the time he took power Ortega was in open opposition to the US and
had travelled to the Soviet Union in 1985 to gain support
Iran-Contra Affair
• In November 1986 the US public learned that profits from the sale of
arms to Iran had been diverted to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua
• Colonel Oliver North revealed that, in addition to the arms money, $14
million in Private donations had been raised to aid resistance to the
Sandinista government
• This was a problem as Congress had called for a halt in military funding
to the Contras in ‘84
Colonel Oliver North ---
The War In Nicaragua continued
• As the conflict continued other Latin American countries became involved in
August of ‘87 Oscar Arias (president of Costa Rica0 put forward a peace
initiative based on three principles
• Cessation of aggression in Latin American countries
• Cessation of foreign aid to insurgencies
• Respect for political Freedoms
• In March of ‘88 a ceasefire is negotiated between the Sandinistas and the
Contras
• This was maintained with only sporadic violence
• Then in ‘89 Ortega held another election
on February 25,1990
• Violeta Chamorrow won with %55
of the vote to Ortega’s %41
Violeta Chamorrow ---
Violeta Chamorro
• Violeta Chamorro who won leadership of Nicaragua from Danielle
Ortaga was the wife of a newspaper Owner/editor who had been
assassinated for criticising the Somoza regime
• She focused on revitalizing the economy and paying back money
Nicaragua owed to the IMF and the World Bank
• She gave back the sugar, coffee and cotton industries to the private
sector and promised to compensate people who lost land during the
program of nationalizing land
• She asked president Bush for $2 billion in aid, he responded by
stopping the US trade embargo and promising to resume diplomatic
relations
• The strategic nature of Nicaragua’s location made the US commit to a
program of support for the forces opposing the Sandinistas
• In October of ‘96 Right wing candidate from the PCL (associated with
Somoza) won the election